Trauma amid devastationAmong the sources of PTSD in civilian life are natural disasters such as tornadoes. New research finds that information and access to care need improvement for nonveterans.Photo: MadriCR/Wikimedia Commons

Review: PTSD resources lacking for nonveterans

In the current issue of the Harvard Review of Psychiatry, a team of researchers based at Brown University reports that information and resources regarding effective therapy for post-traumatic stress disorder are not easily available for nonveterans, who can be affected by the condition after crimes, disasters, and accidents. They offer recommendations for improvement.

PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Post-traumatic stress disorder remains a difficult, urgent, and prevalent problem among combat veterans, but millions of nonveterans experience the condition too. A new study in the Harvard Review of Psychiatry finds that compared to what the Veterans Health Administration and Defense Department make available, treatment resources for nonveterans are much less cohesive and helpful.

“For the other people affected by PTSD — victims of sexual assault, child abuse and natural disasters — there really isn’t an organized body of research that generates guidance for how they and their caregivers should deal with their PTSD,” said lead author Judith Bentkover, professor of the practice in the Brown University School of Public Health and executive and academic director of the Executive Masters in Healthcare Leadership degree program. “We know that gender, race, and culture affect how people deal with anxiety. The research that there is to date doesn’t provide a robust evidence base for treating PTSD in specific vulnerable subpopulations, by either sociodemographic cohort or by cause of PTSD. And where there are some good studies, we need better ways of organizing, synthesizing, retrieving, and translating the information we do have so that all treatment providers, patients, and caregivers can benefit from this knowledge.”

Bentkover became interested in PTSD treatment for veterans when she began co-teaching a class on mental health policy with former U.S. Rep. Patrick Kennedy, a former visiting teaching fellow at Brown. She learned that while many veterans continue to struggle to get help for the difficult but treatable condition, understanding what good care is and locating it is even more challenging for some nonveterans to come by.

“The best PTSD treatment model we have can be found within the VA,” Bentkover said. “Kids have PTSD. Women have PTSD. It’s not just a disease of veterans, although they are a very important and poignant cohort of people who have it. Sexual assault victims, abused children, survivors of natural disasters do not necessarily have a VA to go to. What do they do?”

Kennedy added that people often develop PTSD as a result of terrorism and random acts of violence.

“After 9/11 we saw thousands of New Yorkers and Washingtonians suffer the same invisible wounds of war as our veterans,” he said. “As time passes and we see these wounds in those who are unfortunate enough to experience random acts of violence and other traumas, we simply cannot afford to ignore PTSD as a large and growing healthcare issue."

Judith Bentkover
“[Nonveterans with PTSD] do not necessarily have a VA to go to. What do they do?”

For many nonveterans, Bentkover said, it may be daunting to get connected to care. Some people with PTSD who remain untreated may develop other medical problems and tend to account for more healthcare costs than those persons who receive PTSD treatment.

As an economist, she said she recognizes not only that people are suffering but also that they may be considerably less productive during their struggle. Those who are not treated may require public expenditures if they become jobless or homeless. Marital and family discord that results in broken families could impose costs on their children.

“PTSD is not only a huge healthcare problem, it is a huge cost,” she said.

Reviewing resources

To learn more about what resources civilians might have, Bentkover led a team of seven researchers who reviewed the academic and economic research literature on civilian PTSD treatment as well as consumer-oriented websites. They found that while some research and resources specific to nonveterans can be found, too little is available to help nonveterans or their doctors understand, compare, and access treatment they believe would be right for them.

“Caregiver and patient-centered Internet searches for PTSD treatment programs and support resources located sites that were often rich in information but not necessarily organized to facilitate consumer decision-making,” the authors wrote. “Generally speaking, consumer websites could perform several key functions more effectively, such as simplifying complex evidence regarding treatments, identifying areas of consensus versus controversy, and providing concrete tips for navigating among the different treatment options and providers.”

To some extent the lack of patient-specific treatment guidance stems from a dearth of studies that have evaluated the effectiveness of PTSD treatment delivery among different civilian populations, the authors said, but also there hasn’t been a coordinated effort to amass what is known.

“A major finding of the authors’ search for nonmilitary service providers is that there is no centralized listing of PTSD providers, treatment programs, and support programs at the state or local level and limited listings at the federal level,” the authors wrote.

While many institutions and segments of society, including DoD and the VHA, have become more supportive of veterans affected by PTSD in recent years, a robust support network for nonveterans with PTSD does not appear to have emerged, she said.

Recommendations for improvement

The authors provide several recommendations to improve treatment information for nonveterans. These include:

further research on treatment outcomes, access, and costs;

uniform measures across such studies to ensure comparability and standard means of indexing to improve information discovery;

pursuing research related to specific causes (such as violent crime) and populations (such as women or children);

establishing a patient-centered institute to marshal and maintain resources and best practices for treatment.

“We’d like to see information on outcomes for particular patients that reflect implementation in the real world,” Bentkover said. “We’d like to see a lot of program evaluation with empirical data about treatment efficacy and effectiveness and we’d like to see information on cost effectiveness.”

One Mind for Research and the Tug McGraw Foundation supported the study.

Note to Editors:

Editors: Brown University has a fiber link television studio available for domestic and international live and taped interviews, and maintains an ISDN line for radio interviews. For more information, call (401) 863-2476.